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>> well, luckily michelle feeds him plenty of vegetables at home. he's going to be very, very used to that. there are a lot of products made kosher for passover. a lot of my friends in new york coke and pepsi made with real sugar. >> a bit of historical perspective. the reason that like unleavened bread, why it has to be so. explain to people who don't know. >> okay. so this hotel doesn't just keep kosher, this is preparation to be kosher for passover, which means getting rid of all of these grains that may have basically if they're in touch with water for 18 minutes they may have sprouted. they also have to go through an intensive process to clean all the surfaces that may have come into contact with the forbidden foods during the time. they have to boil water and pour it over surfaces, heat ovens up to a certain temperature and also bring out special instruments and utensils only used during passover. it's part of the ritual. >> all right. good to see you. >> fascinating stuff. >> yeah. unleavened bread is because when the hebrew slaves fled from
>> well, luckily michelle feeds him plenty of vegetables at home. he's going to be very, very used to that. there are a lot of products made kosher for passover. a lot of my friends in new york coke and pepsi made with real sugar. >> a bit of historical perspective. the reason that like unleavened bread, why it has to be so. explain to people who don't know. >> okay. so this hotel doesn't just keep kosher, this is preparation to be kosher for passover, which means getting rid...
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. >> i've got a statement here from the white house, that says michelle and i offer warm wishes to pope francis as he begins his papacy. as a champion of the poor, he carries forth a message of love and compassion and has inspired the world for more than 2,000 years. in each other we see the face of god. as the first pope from the americas, his selection also speaks to the strength and vitality of a region that increasingly shaping our world, alongside millions of hispanic americans, those of us in the united states share the joy of this historic day. let me come to you, professor. it's a big day. i mean, for the first latin-american pope in over 2,000 years, you can see the reaction in buenos aires. this is a hugely catholic part of the world that now has their own man as a pope. tell me about the historical significance of what's happened today. >> sure. we have the first latin-american pope, although i don't think they sat in a room and said who is the best latin-american, they said who is the best pope. i think it was an a-b-c pope. the second is, of course, this is the first time a
. >> i've got a statement here from the white house, that says michelle and i offer warm wishes to pope francis as he begins his papacy. as a champion of the poor, he carries forth a message of love and compassion and has inspired the world for more than 2,000 years. in each other we see the face of god. as the first pope from the americas, his selection also speaks to the strength and vitality of a region that increasingly shaping our world, alongside millions of hispanic americans,...
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michele bachmann trying to duck questions by running away from our dana bash. and -- >> my roommate just pulled a fire alarm and he's got a gun out. >> hear from the students who may have prevented a massacre at a florida college campus. this is the "cnn newsroom." i'm fredricka whitfield in for suzanne malveaux. >>> we begin with two major developments out of colorado where the governor has just signed into law a series of gun control measures. they are some of the most restrictive in the country. one limits magazine capacity. the other to deal with background checks and how to pay for them. this comes just hours after the state's prison chief was gunned down. authorities say tom clements was shot in his home last night. police are talking to neighbors and searching the woods near his property. at a news conference a short while ago colorado's governor was clearly very emotional. >> to me, to i think all of us, in many ways he helped define what a public servant is. he did his job quietly, intently, he cared deeply about his staff, his family and the community
michele bachmann trying to duck questions by running away from our dana bash. and -- >> my roommate just pulled a fire alarm and he's got a gun out. >> hear from the students who may have prevented a massacre at a florida college campus. this is the "cnn newsroom." i'm fredricka whitfield in for suzanne malveaux. >>> we begin with two major developments out of colorado where the governor has just signed into law a series of gun control measures. they are some of...
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. >> hey, michelle. gold has been under pressure. strong economic data surging stock market but rising today as the investors bailout has them searching for safe haven breaking 1600 for the first time since late february. miners rise iing, all higher ri now. >> given the reason that gold has risen today, i think you can short it today and cover your short tomorrow. it will fall back. >> i would fade this rally. i don't think gold has a fundamental reason to go higher and will continue the downward trend. >> no gold owns >> i would rather own silver where there is industrial exposure. >> platinum. you have potential for supply disruption in south africa. if you have precious metals, where you go. >> wow, no china play here or nothing? >> other ways to play china, not necessarily just gold. >> i was thinking inflation everybody loves to talk about. >> if gold is still above 1600 when we get off air, i am going to short it. >> final trade. >>> the new york exchange optioning its mini option. what is a mini option, bob? >> a smaller vers
. >> hey, michelle. gold has been under pressure. strong economic data surging stock market but rising today as the investors bailout has them searching for safe haven breaking 1600 for the first time since late february. miners rise iing, all higher ri now. >> given the reason that gold has risen today, i think you can short it today and cover your short tomorrow. it will fall back. >> i would fade this rally. i don't think gold has a fundamental reason to go higher and will...
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michelle and joey from new york and from new jersey. you were here last night. >> yeah, we were. >> what was it like to see it? >> to see the smoke? >> yeah. >> it's exciting. the energy is really high. there's like very positive vibes around. you kind of just get excited from the energy of the crowd. >> you're both catholic? >> yes. >> why is this such a big decision? >> i think that it's really exciting, because we see like what like this is really important to a lot of people so it's really exciting -- >> the church has had a tough time the last decade or so. is this a bigger decision for this pope than previous years? >> probably. probably so. >> you think so? >> i think it's like pretty unique given the circumstance. so i think everyone's just kind of condpused. is this something they're going to try to do quicker than usual because there's no one right now. or is it something they're going to take a little bit more time to talk over. like we don't know. it's kind of like everyone's, i think they're a little bit confused. when we f
michelle and joey from new york and from new jersey. you were here last night. >> yeah, we were. >> what was it like to see it? >> to see the smoke? >> yeah. >> it's exciting. the energy is really high. there's like very positive vibes around. you kind of just get excited from the energy of the crowd. >> you're both catholic? >> yes. >> why is this such a big decision? >> i think that it's really exciting, because we see like what like this...
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i'm not sure that's michael going to it's quite i mean a lot of russians are not happy about him ok michel. they're not happy but i don't it's because of deposits mean the central bank says up to seventy billion in deposits in cypriot banks seven billion is held by russian nationals that maybe not underestimate but certainly nothing more than double that out of seventy billion now it's quite true that russian entities have loaned money to the. cypriot banks but it's a different matter overwhelmingly the people who are getting burned by this tax on depositors are cypriots. and the notion that russian oligarchs and so on are being burned by this is really put about in germany in order to justify the very harsh treatment of cypriot savers chair don't do you think about that because i mean we always go ahead but i you know i think that there's a there's more money involved here there's there's close to about thirty billion of russian money they're estimating twenty billion losses for russian deposits themselves and remember that it's a range of tax that they are implying anybody with over one
i'm not sure that's michael going to it's quite i mean a lot of russians are not happy about him ok michel. they're not happy but i don't it's because of deposits mean the central bank says up to seventy billion in deposits in cypriot banks seven billion is held by russian nationals that maybe not underestimate but certainly nothing more than double that out of seventy billion now it's quite true that russian entities have loaned money to the. cypriot banks but it's a different matter...
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michelle is here with us on set. michelle, for the u.s. investor, we start looking at these things, try to figure out what it all means. >> they violated the insurance threshold. like i said before, imagine you have your money in a bank in the united states. the fdic comes in and takes it over. because it's failing. and they tell you, oh, by the way, you thought you were protected up to 250,000. you're not. so the reason why people are worried about runs across europe is they see this and they think, oh, my god, could that happen to me here in italy? could that happen to me here in spain? >> do they have the equivalent of an fdic there? >> it's country by country, by cypress had a 1100,000 threshold, so they violated this threshold. so this new theme, it doesn't matter. it's still the violation of that trust that you thought you had in the bank. the second thing that's happened is they violated the capital structure. how do things work here in the united states when you're busting up a bank? you start blowing through the bottom, right? you
michelle is here with us on set. michelle, for the u.s. investor, we start looking at these things, try to figure out what it all means. >> they violated the insurance threshold. like i said before, imagine you have your money in a bank in the united states. the fdic comes in and takes it over. because it's failing. and they tell you, oh, by the way, you thought you were protected up to 250,000. you're not. so the reason why people are worried about runs across europe is they see this and...
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as michelle caruso-cabrera tells us, that fear is being felt on the streets. >> reporter: cyprus yet another country in europe where the devastation from the financial crisis is being felt throughout the population. throughout cyprus lines could be seen at the atms of the country's weakest bank, people desperate to take out cash because they're on the verge of failure. >> we're being treated like third-class citizens and we're very, very angry. >> reporter: how much money did you take out? >> i just took $1,000. i've been taking $1,000 every day. and personally, i'm taking this money and cash with me to the u.k. tonight. >> reporter: because? >> because we don't know what the future of our country holds. >> reporter: the reason they're using the atm? the banks have been closed nearly a week and won't open until tuesday, earliest. business owners deeply affected by the bank closures. the head of this fruit import business is worried about making payroll. >> we are doing our best to expedite the cash collecting process in order to be able to pay our employees next week. most shipping l
as michelle caruso-cabrera tells us, that fear is being felt on the streets. >> reporter: cyprus yet another country in europe where the devastation from the financial crisis is being felt throughout the population. throughout cyprus lines could be seen at the atms of the country's weakest bank, people desperate to take out cash because they're on the verge of failure. >> we're being treated like third-class citizens and we're very, very angry. >> reporter: how much money did...
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about one hundred thousand euro and i think this is what's going to be fast tracked after this event michel you think would be a good idea. because the small might be the problem the problem with insurance agencies like the if not the problem but the issue with the i.c. and agencies like that is they work because you never need them because you can say it was no and in fact all savers know that even if one small bank or even a medium sized bank goes bust you know your money is safe because if the i.c. exists and therefore all savers in a country like the states don't rush to the exit. the e.u. issued a directive that they would stand behind all depositors for one hundred for the first hundred thousand euros that type of insurance program works like that you know you don't actually need the money in a pot it works because those obligations are honored if you start then to bridge that on a it doesn't really matter how much money you've got in the pot what's to stop so we have a situation where a another country let's not get into who that might be next but if if that country its banks are in
about one hundred thousand euro and i think this is what's going to be fast tracked after this event michel you think would be a good idea. because the small might be the problem the problem with insurance agencies like the if not the problem but the issue with the i.c. and agencies like that is they work because you never need them because you can say it was no and in fact all savers know that even if one small bank or even a medium sized bank goes bust you know your money is safe because if...
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michelle caruso-cabrera is on the ground right now. she joins us live with the very latest from cyprus. over to you, michelle. >> reporter: hey, there, maria. the very latest that the cyprus plan tried in part trying to raid a pension fund. cash in the pension fund used now and promising to pay the workers later. but their european partners said, no, that's not going to work, because all you're going to do is defer liabilities. it doesn't help your debt profile. so we don't like that. now they're working on plan "c." the question is, what is that? here's the very latest, the bank holiday, as a result of all of this indecision and inaction has been extended and now it looks like the banks will not open until tuesday of next week, a full week without the banking system operating. the minister of finance is in russia, trying to square away a deal there. we haven't had any good results from there. and then very, very worrisome, a member of the ecb talking even tougher late today, suggesting that if they don't come up with a deal here in cy
michelle caruso-cabrera is on the ground right now. she joins us live with the very latest from cyprus. over to you, michelle. >> reporter: hey, there, maria. the very latest that the cyprus plan tried in part trying to raid a pension fund. cash in the pension fund used now and promising to pay the workers later. but their european partners said, no, that's not going to work, because all you're going to do is defer liabilities. it doesn't help your debt profile. so we don't like that. now...
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michelle caruso-cabrera is there. she has the latest as this market continues to swing on any news coming out of cyprus. >>> and we're heading down to the farm to find out why you may soon lose your appetite when you see where your grocery bill may be headed. back in a moment. [ male announcer ] i've seen incredible things. otherworldly things. but there are some things i've never seen before. this ge jet engine can understand 5,000 data samples per second. which is good for business. because planes use less fuel, spend less time on the ground and more time in the air. suddenly, faraway places don't seem so...far away. ♪ at a hertz expressrent kiosk, you can rent a car without a reservation... and without a line. now that's a fast car. >>> >>> welcome back. the cyprus soap opera continuing. michelle caruso-cabrera has the latest on this developing story in cyprus. >> reporter: hey, there, maria. parliament is inside the building behind me, voting on some legislation. and that legislation has brought out hundreds of
michelle caruso-cabrera is there. she has the latest as this market continues to swing on any news coming out of cyprus. >>> and we're heading down to the farm to find out why you may soon lose your appetite when you see where your grocery bill may be headed. back in a moment. [ male announcer ] i've seen incredible things. otherworldly things. but there are some things i've never seen before. this ge jet engine can understand 5,000 data samples per second. which is good for business....
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michelle? >> reporter: hi there, tyler. the latest is the president says he's going to meet with parliament tomorrow morning. there's still no plan here. in fact, you heard about plan a which was to tax deposits. now we have heard that plan b has been rejected by the troika as well. cyprus government said to the troika, their european partners who they want them to lend money to, they said to them, listen, instead of taxing deposits why don't we do this instead. we have a pension fund, we'll raid it, take the cash, turn it into bond and we'll pay it back over time. the troika said that doesn't do anything for you. you still have liabilities. then they said we're also going it try to sell one of the bad banks. and the fact of the matter is if the bad bank were sellable, people like chris flowers and wilbur ross and tim collins would have been here a long time trying to buy it. they said maybe we'll split it up, divide it into the good bank and bad bank. we'll sell the good bank to the russians and the troika said selling the
michelle? >> reporter: hi there, tyler. the latest is the president says he's going to meet with parliament tomorrow morning. there's still no plan here. in fact, you heard about plan a which was to tax deposits. now we have heard that plan b has been rejected by the troika as well. cyprus government said to the troika, their european partners who they want them to lend money to, they said to them, listen, instead of taxing deposits why don't we do this instead. we have a pension fund,...
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. >> michelle kelly. >> reporter: all from houston, texas thnchts is parson kelly. >> reporter: why did you want to be here with your family? >> it is fantastic. we started out with wanting to take the kids to italy for vacation, got here a week and a half ago and fate has put us here at the right time. we've been coming here for the last day and a half looking at the smoke and a couple times black smoke which was exciting because we knew we'd keep coming back and just feel blessed it happened while we're here. we fly out on friday and it is very exciting. the kids, it's late for them but they're as excited and smiling as can be. >> isn't it past your bed time? >> yes. >> reporter: yeah? what is it like to be here? >> great. >> reporter: yeah? exciting? >> yes. >> reporter: there are a lot of crowds. is everyone -- seems like everyone is very happy here. >> yes. very. >> reporter: yeah? for you, why was it so important to bring the kids? >> well, it's such an historic moment, and we are catholic, so it's even more special for us. both of our families are catholic, so i think this is one
. >> michelle kelly. >> reporter: all from houston, texas thnchts is parson kelly. >> reporter: why did you want to be here with your family? >> it is fantastic. we started out with wanting to take the kids to italy for vacation, got here a week and a half ago and fate has put us here at the right time. we've been coming here for the last day and a half looking at the smoke and a couple times black smoke which was exciting because we knew we'd keep coming back and just...
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among the targets, michelle obama, vice president biden, the fbi director and attorney general, among celebrities mel gibson, ashton kutcher and jayzee, also the l.a. police chief charlie beck. >> we will vigorously pursue the individuals that an have made me a victim and a number of other people in the public eye victims. >> the website posts what appears to be their social security numbers, addresses and phone numbers and in some cases what looked like their actually credit reports where the other information appears to come from. >> the credit report is the key to everything. if a bad guy has your report, he can commit almost any kind of identity theft. >> some of the data is the kind that can be bought online once a social security number and date of birth are known. among other victims, al gore, sarah palin, hillary clinton and singer beyonce. the data company equifax says at least some of their stolen information appears to come from what it called fraudulent and unauthorized access to the annualcreditreport.com website set up to let consumers see their own credit reports once a
among the targets, michelle obama, vice president biden, the fbi director and attorney general, among celebrities mel gibson, ashton kutcher and jayzee, also the l.a. police chief charlie beck. >> we will vigorously pursue the individuals that an have made me a victim and a number of other people in the public eye victims. >> the website posts what appears to be their social security numbers, addresses and phone numbers and in some cases what looked like their actually credit...
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the banks remain closed, demonstrations are starting to take shape and our michelle ka rus michelle will have a live report later. >> keep our cash. get it in the bank. >> find the people responsible for this mess, prosecute them, put them in prison. >> obviously that gentleman is extremely mad. the other side of the story is also anger from russia on a deal to tax those banks accounts because so many russians keep their money in cyprus. so peter, my question to you is, as the finance minister is expected to go to russia tonight, how could russia retaliate? how could the russian government, because it is so angry, what will they do and what could they do? >> well, there are a lot of reactions they could have. first of all, it's hard for me to see shock. it's an island that created eight times of its economy in foreign deposits. most of those were from russia. we're talking about something like 20 billion euros, almost $40 billion worth. the fact is, they are going to be taxed. if you think about a banking system where the banking system is self is eight times the island of the economy, t
the banks remain closed, demonstrations are starting to take shape and our michelle ka rus michelle will have a live report later. >> keep our cash. get it in the bank. >> find the people responsible for this mess, prosecute them, put them in prison. >> obviously that gentleman is extremely mad. the other side of the story is also anger from russia on a deal to tax those banks accounts because so many russians keep their money in cyprus. so peter, my question to you is, as the...
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how do they feel about this, michelle? >> reporter: they are so angry. they think that they have been treated very poorly by the euro group. they are insulted, some of them, at the prospect of taxing any deposits whatsoever. they don't want even the wealthy depositors to be taxed because they see it as an attack on their system here, their business model for the country, which contributes 50% of the gdp. they know there are going to be job losses widespread because they're shrinking the banking sector on purpose. that's really going to hurt here. >> michelle, thank you very much. we'll see you again. great reporting. >>> the trillion-dollar question, folks, is this. is cyprus a potential black swan with huge unforeseen consequences, or just a little island sideshow with no impact on your money? let's ask cio at bmo private bank and steve oth at federated investors. jack, how important is cyprus? >> it is important, brian. this is really the first test of eurozone financial system will. it's finally come down to an insolvency. and the fact that they were
how do they feel about this, michelle? >> reporter: they are so angry. they think that they have been treated very poorly by the euro group. they are insulted, some of them, at the prospect of taxing any deposits whatsoever. they don't want even the wealthy depositors to be taxed because they see it as an attack on their system here, their business model for the country, which contributes 50% of the gdp. they know there are going to be job losses widespread because they're shrinking the...
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michelle? >> there is a statement out, melissa but first let me tell you some reporting i've done that shows that -- at least two sources tell me that it's quite likely that senior bank debt holders in non-viable banks in cyprus will likely take losses. this is a change from what we had seen previously. it looked like they were going to go after depositors, perhaps without touching the senior bank debt holders. this is likely a reflection of the fact that they are trying to reduce the burden on taxing those below the 1 hupp,000 euro threshold, which is the level of insured deposits. so it looks like there's a shift going on in terms of trying to shift the burden sharing and for the first time in a significant way perhaps senior bank debt holders in europe are going to take losses. same time in the euro group statement they say they encourage the protection of depositors below the 100,000 euro but as long as cyprus still comes up with the 5.8 billion euros that they have to do. so that's what th
michelle? >> there is a statement out, melissa but first let me tell you some reporting i've done that shows that -- at least two sources tell me that it's quite likely that senior bank debt holders in non-viable banks in cyprus will likely take losses. this is a change from what we had seen previously. it looked like they were going to go after depositors, perhaps without touching the senior bank debt holders. this is likely a reflection of the fact that they are trying to reduce the...
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good evening, michelle. >> reporter: good evening, larry. it's been a day of high drama here in cyprus. just a few hours ago, the parliament resoundingly rejected the idea of taking money from bank deposits here in order to secure a bailout. the rest of europe groan. protest yourself, however, cheered. now they have to get back to work tomorrow, come up with a plan b., how are they going to get 5.8 billion euros, that's what they have to do to get another $10 billion in loans from the european partners in order to resolve the situation of their near-busted banks. also adding to the drama today, the finance minister tried to resign. it's not clear why. the president wouldn't let him. and then he immediately left for russia. as you mentioned, to try to secure some kind of help, maybe in exchange for natural gas rights. at minimum, they would just like easier terms on a loan that russia gave two years ago. the banks are supposed to reopen thursday but increasingly it's looking like maybe the bank holiday could be extended through the weekend. a
good evening, michelle. >> reporter: good evening, larry. it's been a day of high drama here in cyprus. just a few hours ago, the parliament resoundingly rejected the idea of taking money from bank deposits here in order to secure a bailout. the rest of europe groan. protest yourself, however, cheered. now they have to get back to work tomorrow, come up with a plan b., how are they going to get 5.8 billion euros, that's what they have to do to get another $10 billion in loans from the...
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the second is, as michelle said earlier, a lot of firsts here. particularly, the ecb used to be a chairman to supporter of the depositors. here they are joining an imposition of attack and loss on the depositors and completely calls into question what the central bank loan is supposed to be in a crisis like this. >> if we rule out the worse case scenarios here in terms of global investors, let me bring you into the conversation because one of the biggest fears is if there is a capital slide or a deposit slide from areas not just southern europe, stabilize the global financial system, which includes us. this is a scenario that is possible in your mind. >> well, we have seen today there's no bank run in spain or italy and that's the key. they didn't think, wow, we're going to be next. we're going have our deposits confiscated. so at the moment, this certain of financial zombie apocalypse is still within the island of cyprus. if it escapes then all bets are off. i think where you're going to put your money if you're a depositor, very few safe places
the second is, as michelle said earlier, a lot of firsts here. particularly, the ecb used to be a chairman to supporter of the depositors. here they are joining an imposition of attack and loss on the depositors and completely calls into question what the central bank loan is supposed to be in a crisis like this. >> if we rule out the worse case scenarios here in terms of global investors, let me bring you into the conversation because one of the biggest fears is if there is a capital...
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michelle is talking about a good bank/bad bank, nobody pays on deposits up to $100,000. the bailout is 10 billion euros from the european -- ecb. the bail-in is about $6 billion euros. so greece is looking for whatever they're looking for, $4 billion, $5 billion. or does europe bail that out even more? >> the biggest factor of all, dan and i were talking a couple minutes ago, the depositors above 100,000 will lose 40% to 50%. >> those are russians. they're going to be pissed off. >> the great systemic problem of giant bank failures is somewhat eliminated by what they're putting forward now. >> what do you think, dan? does this work? >> for our viewers i don't think it matters. the specifics are super interesting, we're going to go have a drink. what matters to people at home, what matters to the larger story is we decided that people's property in banks was not their own. >> in europe or in the u.s., too? >> in europe only. >> they wouldn't pull that here. >> one never knows but, no, they would never put that here. whatever bank is -- >> terribly important, because it's
michelle is talking about a good bank/bad bank, nobody pays on deposits up to $100,000. the bailout is 10 billion euros from the european -- ecb. the bail-in is about $6 billion euros. so greece is looking for whatever they're looking for, $4 billion, $5 billion. or does europe bail that out even more? >> the biggest factor of all, dan and i were talking a couple minutes ago, the depositors above 100,000 will lose 40% to 50%. >> those are russians. they're going to be pissed off....
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michelle caruso-cabrera is standing by. michelle? >> hey, there, scott. cyprus has to move on to plan "c" because plan "b" has been rejected by troika. cyprus went to the troika and said instead of depositing the deposits in the bank what if we we raided a pension fund? like 4 billion euros and they don't like that because if you raid it now, you get cash. you've got to pay the workers down the road. so you still have liabilities. you have increased them. doesn't do anything for your debt sustainabilities. what if we sell the good banks to the russians, and the troika said it's the bad bank that's the problem. who who's going to absorb the losses so we're back to square one. ultimately now if the european union doesn't blink and if the russians don't come through with another plan, cyprus faces a choice. they either wind down the two big banks and a lot of people are taking a lot of losses though the insured depositors can be protected or they leave the euro. we'll have to hear a decision within the next couple of days. in the meantime, we have three grap
michelle caruso-cabrera is standing by. michelle? >> hey, there, scott. cyprus has to move on to plan "c" because plan "b" has been rejected by troika. cyprus went to the troika and said instead of depositing the deposits in the bank what if we we raided a pension fund? like 4 billion euros and they don't like that because if you raid it now, you get cash. you've got to pay the workers down the road. so you still have liabilities. you have increased them. doesn't do...
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michelle caruso cabrera on the insides of that deal and reverberations. she's on her way soon to that part of the world. steve liesman on his way soon to westchester county. robert, who knows where he's going. what it might mean for russia's rich. >> nondisclosed location. >> tyler, i'm looking at the markets and the commentary coming in to my e-mail. i think knee-jerk contagion is now becoming contagion as some investors doubt that what's going on in cyprus is really raising concerns about the positive insurance worldwide. citi group in a report that just came out, contagion risks are over rated in our view. the risk of bank runs in other euro area countries has clearly risen but the unique features of the cypriot situation should limit the read through to other cases in the euro area. in case you didn't know this, issuing a strong statement the reassure american depositors. while the situation in cyprus is a real concern for the depositors in cypriot's banks, depositors in the u.s. banks are insured. the cyprus debacle is the sort of thing that has kept
michelle caruso cabrera on the insides of that deal and reverberations. she's on her way soon to that part of the world. steve liesman on his way soon to westchester county. robert, who knows where he's going. what it might mean for russia's rich. >> nondisclosed location. >> tyler, i'm looking at the markets and the commentary coming in to my e-mail. i think knee-jerk contagion is now becoming contagion as some investors doubt that what's going on in cyprus is really raising...
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michelle? >> reporter: yes, hi there, sue. about 100 meters that way or where you see all the prote protesters, they gathered a couple hours ago. they learned that the bank is going to be shut down, one of the two insolvent banks here in cyprus, one of the measures they're going to likely have to take in order to secure a bailout. behind me is the parliament. inside we understand that they are going to pass a law that gives the central bank the right to shut down banks in this country. they didn't have the right to do that before. if you don't understand a lot about banking or bailouts, this is very simple. if you shut down a bad bank, you save a lot of money. if you try to save a bad bank, it costs a lot of money. you have to pour capital into it. you have to dig a hole in the ground and pour money into it to have a very strong base for a bank. the worse the bank is, the more it's going to cost. it gets a lot cheaper just to shut it down. they're going to split into a good bank and a bad bank. the impaired assets will sell of
michelle? >> reporter: yes, hi there, sue. about 100 meters that way or where you see all the prote protesters, they gathered a couple hours ago. they learned that the bank is going to be shut down, one of the two insolvent banks here in cyprus, one of the measures they're going to likely have to take in order to secure a bailout. behind me is the parliament. inside we understand that they are going to pass a law that gives the central bank the right to shut down banks in this country....
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michelle joins us by phone. >> good evening. the details are changing, but the one core fact important to investors is true. for the first time ever in the european crisis, portions of bank accounts will be seized in order to pay for a bailout. cyprus agreed to this to get a 10 billion euro loan to bail out their banks. what is still unclear and controversial is whether insured deposits will also be seized. original plan was if you had an account in cyprus with less than 100,000 euros, would you have to pay a tax even though it falls below the insurance threshold. even though in theory it was supposed to be 100% guaranteed by the state. that turned out to be so controversial they are second-guessing themselves and reconsidering. a few hours ago the minister put out a statement saying they thought the smaller depositors should be protected. that doesn't mean they will, however, because cyprus has to figure out some way to contribute to this bailout. they would have to tax the biggest depositors, the russians even more than the 10
michelle joins us by phone. >> good evening. the details are changing, but the one core fact important to investors is true. for the first time ever in the european crisis, portions of bank accounts will be seized in order to pay for a bailout. cyprus agreed to this to get a 10 billion euro loan to bail out their banks. what is still unclear and controversial is whether insured deposits will also be seized. original plan was if you had an account in cyprus with less than 100,000 euros,...
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michelle? >> we are a lot closer to a resolution than we have been throughout this crisis. that's the broad headline. here are some of the details. the way it will get resolved will make a lot of people in cyprus unhappy. a lot of bank employees showed up to prot the unfolding plans. the magic number was 5.8 billion euros. they need new revenue or savings in their budget. they do that and europe says we'll give you 10 billion euros for a bail-out loan. how you going to get there? they didn't want to tax depositors. they're going to resolve at least one bank. brussels would like them to do two. that means getting rid of bad banks over time. that means losses of employment, uninsured depositors will take very large hits. insured depositors will remain whole and the banking system will stay afloat. this will please the european central bank so that everything can re-open on tuesday, if everything goes according to plan. as long as these guys in the parliament vote on this tomorrow. >> keith, i want ask you this because there are a lot of ifs. is this any better for the stock m
michelle? >> we are a lot closer to a resolution than we have been throughout this crisis. that's the broad headline. here are some of the details. the way it will get resolved will make a lot of people in cyprus unhappy. a lot of bank employees showed up to prot the unfolding plans. the magic number was 5.8 billion euros. they need new revenue or savings in their budget. they do that and europe says we'll give you 10 billion euros for a bail-out loan. how you going to get there? they...
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so, in that note, please join in the thanking michelle rhee. [applause] >> up next, after words with guest host jamie weinstein. this week, kim ghattas and her book: the secretary, a journey with hillary clinton from beirut to the heart of american power." she conditions miss clinton's role, and whether u.s. power is in decline. the program is about an hour. >> where we should begin is to talk about your biography. i think as much as this book is about hillary clinton and her time as secretary of state, it's also about your experience from beirut to covering the secretary of state around the world. so, why don't you just begin by talking about where you came from. >> guest: great. thank you very much for having me. i'm delighted to be here and delighted by your first question. the star, the biggest star in the book is hillary clinton herself. but this isn't just a biography of an historic woman. it's also a different take on the whole issue of american power, and as you mention i come from beirut. i grew up there i was born in beirut in the mid
so, in that note, please join in the thanking michelle rhee. [applause] >> up next, after words with guest host jamie weinstein. this week, kim ghattas and her book: the secretary, a journey with hillary clinton from beirut to the heart of american power." she conditions miss clinton's role, and whether u.s. power is in decline. the program is about an hour. >> where we should begin is to talk about your biography. i think as much as this book is about hillary clinton and her...
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the process to put this together and now the general secretary of the national union of journalists michel sanish story is actually come out at least on friday anyway in the original proposals against this you saying all journalists need to be on the panel and of course they do journalists at the cutting edge and it's not the journalists that cause these problems it's the proprietors and the editors of these firms so if you're going to have journalists on the panel if it's not going to have some of the should we say less establishment well known victims i think the whole thing may slowly turn into another establishment fix up as this happened at the b.b.c. live from bristol investigative journalist tony gosling thanks very much indeed for your thoughts and for you time. thank you. iraq is about to mark ten years since the u.s. led invasion with at least fifty people killed since last week in suicide bombings across the country in two thousand and three washington unleashed its shock and or air strikes aiming to rid the country of suspected weapons of mass destruction and toppled saddam hus
the process to put this together and now the general secretary of the national union of journalists michel sanish story is actually come out at least on friday anyway in the original proposals against this you saying all journalists need to be on the panel and of course they do journalists at the cutting edge and it's not the journalists that cause these problems it's the proprietors and the editors of these firms so if you're going to have journalists on the panel if it's not going to have...
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back to you guys. >> thanks, michelle. the banking crisis in cyprus keeping global investors on edge. joined by the u.s. equities strategist at jpmorgan. and from charlotte, john lynch, regional chief investment officer at wells fargo. welcome in. and tom, i think back on how many times you've been on and how many times you've probab probably -- we've asked you -- i can put in different scenarios. this time it's cyprus. but how many times have we asked you about, what about this? are you still bullish? are you still bullish? >> yeah, you know, i think long-term i think everything in place for bull market still remains intact. it's driven by a housing recove recovery. but in the short-term, i think we do have to be somewhat careful about this. i just don't want to be underestimating, you know, the situation in cypress. >> do you -- strategists at major firms, they come and go. are you finally at jpmorgan, do they finally think you're pretty cool now? you stayed long for the last five years. >> that's right. >> thick and thi
back to you guys. >> thanks, michelle. the banking crisis in cyprus keeping global investors on edge. joined by the u.s. equities strategist at jpmorgan. and from charlotte, john lynch, regional chief investment officer at wells fargo. welcome in. and tom, i think back on how many times you've been on and how many times you've probab probably -- we've asked you -- i can put in different scenarios. this time it's cyprus. but how many times have we asked you about, what about this? are you...
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michelle caruso-cabrera with the latest on this developing story. >> instead of the tradition route of severe austerity across the country with much higher taxes and pay cuts, instead what they did was they taxed bank deposits. they're calling it a tax. a lot of folks are calling it a seizure. here's what's significant. even small depositors below the insurance threshold are going to get hit. the original number for small depositors below 100,000 euros was 6.5%. they're working in parliament right now about shifting that and any other subsequent plan suggests that if you have insured money it will still get hit. what did we see over the week whend this announcement happened on yesterday? runs on the atms at the banks in cypress because they'd shut down the banks as a result of this. they stopped all wire transfers and you also if you tried to take money out they had partitioned out the amount of money that you were supposed to be giveing to the government each though there hasn't been a vote in parliament. why did cypress need a bailout? its banks are bust. the reason the banks in sicy
michelle caruso-cabrera with the latest on this developing story. >> instead of the tradition route of severe austerity across the country with much higher taxes and pay cuts, instead what they did was they taxed bank deposits. they're calling it a tax. a lot of folks are calling it a seizure. here's what's significant. even small depositors below the insurance threshold are going to get hit. the original number for small depositors below 100,000 euros was 6.5%. they're working in...
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he says, michelle, the markets are rallying. i said, simon, i think it's that the markets don't care all that much about cyprus. it's too small to matter. well, i think one thing the eurozone learned last monday is they were they were potentially going to be a massive run on the banks in europe. they came back down. so if anything, the eurozone has gotten more comfort that there is no contagion risk. why is the market so tough? either market they can just solve this problem and is we don't have to worry or the market doesn't care. i think it's the latter. >> you think the market doesn't care? >> i think the market doesn't care. sicyprus is a tiny economy. its banks are not highly connected with the rest of the international financial system. there is no risk of contagion here. >> adam, actually, of all the ideas you laid out, which do you think is the least bad of all those solutions? is it going ahead and letting the banks fail? >> that would be my preferred route. failure implies that the banks can't pay their depositors. they
he says, michelle, the markets are rallying. i said, simon, i think it's that the markets don't care all that much about cyprus. it's too small to matter. well, i think one thing the eurozone learned last monday is they were they were potentially going to be a massive run on the banks in europe. they came back down. so if anything, the eurozone has gotten more comfort that there is no contagion risk. why is the market so tough? either market they can just solve this problem and is we don't have...
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michelle caruso-cabrera. what is this controversy all about? >> reporter: well, this country about six months ago went to the other countries in europe and said we need a lot of help. we need 17 billion euros because we have a bank that's on the verge of collapse and we need -- we've gotten less tax revenue because of the recession. and so, remember, the europeans have already bailed out greece, portugal, ireland. so when cyprus went to them, we'll lend you $10 billion. you guys have to come up with $7 billion. and the way the cyprus economy is structured, it's almost all banks. huge banks relative to the size of the economy. and so the solution they came up with was taxing deposits in banks. that has turned out to be incredibly controversial. last night the parliament here voted it down even though there had been intense negotiations for weeks about it. now today, it's about plan "b" and it's not clear whether there will be a plan "b." the banks are closed, only get money out of atms, the financial system here on the verge of collapse. and if
michelle caruso-cabrera. what is this controversy all about? >> reporter: well, this country about six months ago went to the other countries in europe and said we need a lot of help. we need 17 billion euros because we have a bank that's on the verge of collapse and we need -- we've gotten less tax revenue because of the recession. and so, remember, the europeans have already bailed out greece, portugal, ireland. so when cyprus went to them, we'll lend you $10 billion. you guys have to...
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joining us from cyprus is our chief international correspondent michelle caruso-cabrera. michelle? >> hi there, scott. >> as a result of rejecting that plan last night in parliament and now it's plan b and it's emergency meeting after emergency meeting to try to fig you out a way for this government to come down in euros in either savings or revenues in order to get a $10 billion euro loan to bail out their banks. they've got to come up with that number or else we'll come up with a meltdown. in the wakes of the vote yesterday told the cypriots. don't think you're negotiating this deal. don't come back to us. it was a toughly-worded statement. russia, by the way, is not buying one of the troubled banks. there had been a report that that was going to happen that briefly spiked the euro. and one of the government spokespersons immediately said it was false and we saw that rally disappear. there's a cabinet meeting two hours from now and at some point they've got to announce, what are they going to do about the banks tomorrow? are they going re-open or not? it seems implausible at this
joining us from cyprus is our chief international correspondent michelle caruso-cabrera. michelle? >> hi there, scott. >> as a result of rejecting that plan last night in parliament and now it's plan b and it's emergency meeting after emergency meeting to try to fig you out a way for this government to come down in euros in either savings or revenues in order to get a $10 billion euro loan to bail out their banks. they've got to come up with that number or else we'll come up with a...
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michelle is live in cyprus with the very latest on the story. michelle? >> we'll come back to michelle in a moment. >> in the meantime, we're going to take a quick break here. we ask you what yoga pants? find out if the company's problem with sheerness is a temporary hiccup. ♪ [ cows moo ] [ sizzling ] more rain... [ thunder rumbles ] ♪ [ male announcer ] when the world moves... futures move first. learn futures from experienced pros with dedicated chats and daily live webinars. and trade with papermoney to test-drive the market. ♪ all on thinkorswim. from td ameritrade. >>> >>> hi. i'm here in cyprus where the financial crisis -- i'm live in cyprus. welcome back to cnbc. take a look over my shoulder. what you see is a line at an atm. right now it's ten deep. it's been running 20 deep all day long at all the branches of this bank. it's one of the weakest in cyprus. it's one of the ones under threat as this country grapples with the financial crisis and secures a bailout from the european partners. this is rapidly becoming a cashless society because
michelle is live in cyprus with the very latest on the story. michelle? >> we'll come back to michelle in a moment. >> in the meantime, we're going to take a quick break here. we ask you what yoga pants? find out if the company's problem with sheerness is a temporary hiccup. ♪ [ cows moo ] [ sizzling ] more rain... [ thunder rumbles ] ♪ [ male announcer ] when the world moves... futures move first. learn futures from experienced pros with dedicated chats and daily live webinars....
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melissa: the always-fabulous michelle gerard, thanks for coming on. [laughter] >> see you soon, bye-bye. lori: all right. it's been a wild day in the commodities market especially for natural gas. phil flynn of price futures group is in the pits of the cme. phil, natural gas hitting $4 earlier, something we haven't seen since 2011, right? >> oh, yes. i was so much younger then. i remember it well. [laughter] pretty k350eu9ing stuff today. and i'll tell you what, if you look at natural gas today, we have pulled back just a little bit, but not as much as you might think. you know, despite the fact that we sell 62 btfs, we were looking for a drawdown of 70 billion feet, if you look at the big picture, things are tightening dramatically on the supply side. supplies of natural gas are now about 21% below where they were a year ago, and for the first time in, like, a year and a half the five-year average we're below double digits. we fell below 10 percent. so that's huge. what does that mean for oil? not a heck of a lot. oil's focused on concerns about euro
melissa: the always-fabulous michelle gerard, thanks for coming on. [laughter] >> see you soon, bye-bye. lori: all right. it's been a wild day in the commodities market especially for natural gas. phil flynn of price futures group is in the pits of the cme. phil, natural gas hitting $4 earlier, something we haven't seen since 2011, right? >> oh, yes. i was so much younger then. i remember it well. [laughter] pretty k350eu9ing stuff today. and i'll tell you what, if you look at...
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watch video of michelle alexander at booktv.org and read "the new jim crow" and then on tuesday, march 26th at 9 p.m. eastern, join us live online with your questions and comments on "the new jim crow." >> next, historian hugh howard recounts the war of 1812 from the viewpoint of president james madison and first lady dolly madison. the author examines president madison's decision to declare war, the first president to do so, and the succeeding battles on land and sea as america fought its second war for independence from britain. this is a little under an hour. .. we will ask staff take? maybe. or maybe not. just didn't hold up. or yes. even though hugh howard and i are fast friends and had more than a few beers together over the years and written many chair left side by side while skiing doesn't necessarily follow that i would staff pick his excellent new book. i did it because it is in fact an excellent book. moron that in a moment. hugh howard's book shop working in new york for various publishing houses for ten years. as an architectural historian he wrote a series of articles for
watch video of michelle alexander at booktv.org and read "the new jim crow" and then on tuesday, march 26th at 9 p.m. eastern, join us live online with your questions and comments on "the new jim crow." >> next, historian hugh howard recounts the war of 1812 from the viewpoint of president james madison and first lady dolly madison. the author examines president madison's decision to declare war, the first president to do so, and the succeeding battles on land and sea...
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a festive touch first observed in 2009 and it was inspired by first lady michelle obama, a gushing nod to her hometown, chicago. the royal couple getting ready to welcome a new addition to the family, a boy, a girl, no one knows yet, but the duchess of cambridge does have a preference and so does her husband, prince william. and it looks like he they don't agree. ♪ baby love, my baby love ♪ ♪ i need you, oh how i need you ♪ why do people count on sunsweet prune juice to stay fit on the inside? it's made only from prunes, nothing else. it works, simple as that. it's a natural source of fiber and five essential vitamins. it's the smart choice for me. stay fit on the inside with sunsweet's amazing juices. >> no word yet whether the royal baby is going to be a boy or a girl, but kate middleton wants... wait for it, a soldier who met the duchess who is five months pregnant says while she and william were attending it a ceremony honoring irish guards, he asked her if she knew the baby's gender. she responded, she did not know, but hopes it is a boy. the same soldier also says kate re
a festive touch first observed in 2009 and it was inspired by first lady michelle obama, a gushing nod to her hometown, chicago. the royal couple getting ready to welcome a new addition to the family, a boy, a girl, no one knows yet, but the duchess of cambridge does have a preference and so does her husband, prince william. and it looks like he they don't agree. ♪ baby love, my baby love ♪ ♪ i need you, oh how i need you ♪ why do people count on sunsweet prune juice to stay fit on the...
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michelle obama made a speech at the university of iowa. they had set up on of the early voting places right across the street. she gave her speech and marched right out to vote. that is the way they got a lot of their votes. there is some fraud, too. you know that. then you look at the republicans. unfortunately we let the establishment pick another loser for us. the fight we have and the fight i am asking you to engage in is between the establishment and the grass roots. the establishment has given us a whole series of losers, bob dole and john mccain and mitt romney. even when they picked a winner they picked somebody who spent more than the democrats, added more programs that cost money to the taxpayers, and he tried to give us open borders to the north american union and through the amnesty that he lined up with ted kennedy. we need to have the grassroots takeover and elect the kind of candidate sarah palin has been backing. that is your challenge. i urge you to be a part of the republican party because we have a two-party system, a th
michelle obama made a speech at the university of iowa. they had set up on of the early voting places right across the street. she gave her speech and marched right out to vote. that is the way they got a lot of their votes. there is some fraud, too. you know that. then you look at the republicans. unfortunately we let the establishment pick another loser for us. the fight we have and the fight i am asking you to engage in is between the establishment and the grass roots. the establishment has...
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michelle, always a pleasure. you ask good questions and you've got great answers and we thank you very much for joining us live today. >> you bet. take care. >> alisyn: you buying a house? before you sign on the dotted line, check the fine print. turns out there are plenty of rules that give your lender the upper hand. real estate guru bob massi is answering all of your questions coming up. >> brian: jeff gordon takes a car salesman for the ride of his life. the prank you got to see to believe. [ male announcer ] in blind taste tests, even ragu users chose prego. prego?! but i've been buying ragu for years. [ thinking ] i wonderhat other questionable choices i've made? [ club scene music ] [ sigh of relief ] [ male announcer ] choose taste. choose prego. [ sigh of relief ] new honey bunches of oats greek yohere we go.ole grain. honey cornflakes and chunks of greek yogurt. i'm tasting both the yogurt and the honey at the same time. i'm like digging this yogurt thing. i feel healthy. new honey bunches of oats greek
michelle, always a pleasure. you ask good questions and you've got great answers and we thank you very much for joining us live today. >> you bet. take care. >> alisyn: you buying a house? before you sign on the dotted line, check the fine print. turns out there are plenty of rules that give your lender the upper hand. real estate guru bob massi is answering all of your questions coming up. >> brian: jeff gordon takes a car salesman for the ride of his life. the prank you got...
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"newshour" correspondent spencer michels reports on a new exhibit at san francisco's deyoung museum. a warning, some images in this story are disturbing. >> reporter: it was in 2003 when the u.s. invaded iraq, looking for weapons of mass destruction, american journalists who covered while the bush administration encouraged embedding and said it wasn't responsible for the safety of those not embedded, some journalists set out on their own to see what they could see without american mel tear supervision or restrictions. >> with iraq, this is what i knew about it before i went for the first time. >> reporter: thorn anderson and kale alford, ameri reed couple who live in texas were among the unembedded photojournalists who covered iraq back then. their san francisco exhibit "eye level in iraq" shows the result of their taking chances as they tried to find iraqis in situations apart from the troops. >> when you talk to an iraqi person and you're surrounded by these giant men with >> when you talk to an iraqi person and you're surrounded by these giant men with, you know, automatic weapons
"newshour" correspondent spencer michels reports on a new exhibit at san francisco's deyoung museum. a warning, some images in this story are disturbing. >> reporter: it was in 2003 when the u.s. invaded iraq, looking for weapons of mass destruction, american journalists who covered while the bush administration encouraged embedding and said it wasn't responsible for the safety of those not embedded, some journalists set out on their own to see what they could see without...
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. >> reporter: michele is a therapist who specializes in mothers and she says medication can be a good thing but only under a doctor's supervision. >> i think mothers should be thinking of it as i'm going through a hard time and i'm going to use medication to get me through this but it shouldn't be a forever kind of idea. >> reporter: ann mcwilliams calls her time on xanax a temporary fix. the mississippi mom and author of mommy needs a xanax went on the medication when full time parenting felt like just too much. >> it did get me over a speed bump. it helped to remove me from the high pressure feeling. >> reporter: aware of the addictive nature of xanax ann recently weaned herself off the drug but she like anne marie and melissa says no one should judge moms who turn to med indication. >> how can you be a good mom if you don't take care of yourself? >> it helps me a lot to have this medication tool in my toolbox. >> we want to know that all the women profiled in the piece were under a doctor's care when they were professionally prescribed their medications and for more on this now we
. >> reporter: michele is a therapist who specializes in mothers and she says medication can be a good thing but only under a doctor's supervision. >> i think mothers should be thinking of it as i'm going through a hard time and i'm going to use medication to get me through this but it shouldn't be a forever kind of idea. >> reporter: ann mcwilliams calls her time on xanax a temporary fix. the mississippi mom and author of mommy needs a xanax went on the medication when full...
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>> i ate there with my kids at the end of last year. >> michelle, this isn't fair. we have you in a box. you come in and we'll talk about it. you clearly have a different point of view. we should discuss. it's not about individual choice. i'll give you the last word next time. thanks, michelle. living with moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis means living with pain. it could also mean living with joint damage. humira, adalimumab, can help treat more than just the pain. for many adults, humira is clinically proven to help relieve pain and stop further joint damage. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal events, such as infections, lymphoma, or other types of cancer, have happened. blood, liver and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure have occurred. before starting humira, your doctor should test you for tb. ask your doctor if you live in or have been to a region where certain fungal infections are common. tell your doctor if you have had tb, hepatitis b,
>> i ate there with my kids at the end of last year. >> michelle, this isn't fair. we have you in a box. you come in and we'll talk about it. you clearly have a different point of view. we should discuss. it's not about individual choice. i'll give you the last word next time. thanks, michelle. living with moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis means living with pain. it could also mean living with joint damage. humira, adalimumab, can help treat more than just the pain. for many...